He mocked her as "a secret admirer" of tax cuts and an opponent
of measures crucial to keeping Americans safe, warning that "terrorists
win and America loses" if her Democrats prevailed on Election Day.
She called him dangerous and in denial, an "emperor with no clothes"
who has misled the country about Iraq and presided over an economy that
still fails many. Now, President Bush and House Minority Leader Nancy
Pelosi are making nice.

Within hours of an election that puts Democrats in charge of the House
and the Senate for the final two years of Bush's presidency, the president
and the woman all but certain to be House speaker proclaimed reconciliation.

It started with what both described as a gracious phone call early
Wednesday and, at Bush's invitation, continues over lunch on Thursday.

Before lunching with Pelosi, the president was having breakfast with
House and Senate Republican leaders and meeting with his Cabinet.

Bush and Pelosi pledged to find common ground in a turned-upside-down
Washington.

"The people have spoken, and now it's time for us to move on,"
Bush told reporters in the East Room on Wednesday.

Said Pelosi in her own news conference at the Capitol: "Democrats
are not about getting even. Democrats are about helping the American
people to get ahead."

This after some seriously sharp rhetoric.

Pelosi's criticism of Bush occasionally veered into the personal. "Oblivious,
in denial, dangerous," she said of him in early September, referring
to his administration's bungled response to Hurricane Katrina. The president
"is an incompetent leader _ in fact he's not a leader," Pelosi
said in 2004, referring to his Iraq policies.

"`Stay the course' is not a strategy, it's a slogan, and we need
more than that," she said in June in a jab at how Bush once described
his approach to the war.

Bush rarely referred to Pelosi by name. But in speeches during the
campaign he made "the person who wants to be speaker of the House"
_ an idea that had him once snapping that "that's not going to
happen" to an interviewer _ the poster child for all he saw wrong
with Democrats.

Noting that she voted against renewing the USA Patriot Act, creating
a Homeland Security Department, authorizing a warrantless wiretapping
program and questioning terrorists in the way he had proposed, the president
said, "Given the record of Democrats on our nation's security,
I understand why they want to change the subject."

Because of Democratic calls for an Iraq exit strategy, Bush accused
them of believing "the best way to protect the American people
is wait until we're attacked again."

Wednesday, the president dismissed the bitter language as nothing more
than campaign-trail heat.

"I understand when campaigns end, and I know when governing begins,"
he said.

Both sides have much at stake.

The last two years of a presidency are difficult times for any Oval
Office occupant. In the twilight of power, they must fight lame-duck
status to get anything done.

But Bush is heading into that perilous period after an Election Day
that pried his party's grip from Capitol Hill, in voting widely seen
as a rebuke of him and his leadership, particularly on Iraq.

That makes his domestic wish list _ such as adding private accounts
to Social Security and permanently extending all tax cuts passed during
his administration _ not much more than a fantasy, especially for a
president who largely has ignored the same Democrats who now will control
the legislative agenda.

Add to that the prospect of Democratic investigations into missteps
in the war, treatment of terrorism detainees and Bush's expansion of
executive power, and his next two years could be a headache.

Democrats, too, have much to lose. If seen as unproductive or too obstructionist,
they risk losing their majority _ a very slim one in the Senate _ in
two years. How they govern also could impact the party's chances in
the wide-open race for the White House in 2008.

Hence all the happy talk about bipartisanship.

Pelosi, for instance, put any suggestion of impeachment proceedings
against Bush "off the table." She welcomed the president's
move to capitulate to critics and accept the resignation of Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.

Bush promised "a lot of meetings with Democrats and a lot of discussion
with Democrats." He signaled readiness to consider Democratic priorities
such as a federal minimum-wage increase and to find compromise on renewing
the No Child Left Behind education law, overhauling immigration policy
and overhauling budget-busting entitlement programs.

Asked why his pledge of bipartisanship should be believed when so many
others have been broken, he said simply: "Do it. That's how you
do it."

Yet the two sides remain bitterly divided over Iraq.

"'Full speed ahead' _ I don't think so," Pelosi said on CNN,
mocking Vice President Dick Cheney's contention that the administration
would continue its war strategy unbowed.

Bush countered that leaving Iraq before the mission is complete is
a nonstarter. "If the goal is success, then we can work together.
If the goal is, get out now regardless, then that's going to be hard
to work together," he said.

Pelosi also said Democrats will pursue an agenda that has been resisted
by Bush, including cutting student loan interest rates, funding embryonic
stem cell research, authorizing the federal government to negotiate
lower drug prices for Medicare patients and imposing a national cap
on industrial carbon dioxide emissions.

Bush indicated his patience with compromise would go only so far. He
said he wanted to move ahead with strengthening presidential powers,
an area where Democrats think Bush already has stretched too far.

"She's not going to abandon her principles and I'm not going to
abandon mine," he said.